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Hexanchiformes

Hexanchiformes
Temporal range: Middle Jurassic–Recent

Possible Paleozoic record

Chlamydoselachus anguineus 3.jpg
Frilled shark, Chlamydoselachus anguineus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
Superorder: Selachimorpha
Order: Hexanchiformes
F. de Buen, 1926
Families

Crassonotidae
Mcmurdodontidae?
Orthacodontidae
Chlamydoselachidae
Hexanchidae


Possible Paleozoic record

Crassonotidae
Mcmurdodontidae?
Orthacodontidae
Chlamydoselachidae
Hexanchidae

The Hexanchiformes are the order consisting of the most primitive types of sharks, and numbering just six extant species. Fossil sharks that were apparently very similar to modern sevengill species are known from Jurassic specimens.

Hexanchiform sharks have only one dorsal fin, either six or seven gill slits, and no nictitating membrane in the eyes. Shark teeth similar to those modern hexanchids are known from Devonian deposits in Antarctica and Australia, as well as Permian deposits in Japan. If these are in fact hexanchids, this may be the only extant order of elasmobranchs to have survived after the Permian extinction (and by extension, the oldest extant order of elasmobranchs) .

The frilled shark, Chlamydoselachus anguineus, is very different from the cow sharks, and it has been proposed to be moved to its own order, Chlamydoselachiformes.


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Wikipedia

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